Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Here in this little Greek island people have always given
each other food, often already cooked. The local family that has adopted me
often send a family member round with a plate or tupperware of whatever the
family is having today, especially if it’s some traditional dish — a favourite
is Yiouverlakia —that they know I like. It is likely, in the present
circumstances, that people will do this more and more. Thank God I live in a
small community; things will not get as bad as they are in the cities. No-one will be allowed to go hungry here.

Yesterday my friend Tasos presented me with an enormous
marrow; I shall stuff it with a mincemeat sauce, bake it, and take it round to
the bookshop, where we gather of an evening, to share. I am tempted, for all
that most of the others know only a little English, to take round also a
recording of the Marrow Song. (You know: ‘Oh, what a beauty, I’ve never seen
one as big as that before…’ Greeks love a double entendre.)

I don’t know much about vegetable growing but I know what I like:
as far as I’m concerned a marrow is just an overgrown courgette, and unless you
do things with it it’s pretty bland and boring. The same does not go for tiny
courgettes, though of course the English will find a way to make any food bland
and boring; they will chop up courgettes and cook them to death. The thing to
do however is to top and tail them, cutting off as little as possible, and then
steam them whole until they just begin to soften. Serve whole, warm rather than hot,
with olive oil, salt, and pepper, eat separately rather than with other more
strongly flavoured foods. This way you will appreciate their fine, delicate
flavour.

Yes, I know I don’t usually write about these sorts of
things, but the way Greece is going we are all going to have to think more
about the next meal.

Well all right then: I wanted to write about something else
entirely for my first new blog entry after a silence forced on me by Google,
but as an English writer who has spent more than half an already long life in
Greece, I suppose I have to write about the ‘crisis’. (By definition, a crisis
occupies a point in time. ‘Continuing’, ‘Long-term’, and (God help the English
language) ‘Ongoing’ Crises are grammatical nonsense.)

First, a general political point: Tsipras has set up a
referendum for next Sunday, at which Greek voters will be asked to say ‘Yes’ or
‘No’. Or rather, ‘No’ or ‘Yes’; the ‘No’ box is the top one on the ballot
paper. But ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ to what? In fact, to acceptance or rejection of
further austerity measures, but many Greeks think they are voting on whether or
not to stay in the European Community, so there is a danger that these people –
quite possibly the majority — will in all innocence vote ‘Yes’. That is to say,
in favour of having their already almost unlivable conditions — derisory
pensions, collapsing health service, unemployment, rising suicide rates, etc.
etc. — made quite impossible.

It has been said by people whose paternalistic arrogance
makes them think their audience is even more simple-minded than they are
themselves that a ship’s captain doesn’t ask the passengers to vote on the
ship’s course. No indeed: Tsipras is a Prime Minister, not a captain, and
Greece is a democratic state, not a ship. Contrary to the boastful myth, Greece
has very little experience of democracy, but to date Tsipras has shown himself
the most democratic Prime Minister Greece has ever had. He was voted in on a
promise to end austerity; he is being bullied by the IMF and the Central
European Bank into breaking that promise. He, and the Greek people, are being
punished for behaving democratically. Tsipras quite rightly feels morally
obliged to ask the Greek people whether they want him to break his promise.

I like him, and I wish him good luck; he, and Greece, are
going to need it.

I was going to continue to talk about this on a more
personal level; tell you what my Greek friends and I have been talking and
arguing — in terms surprisingly calm and good-humoured — on these subjects. But
I must dash down to the harbour to see, now that the electricity has come on
again so that it might be working, whether the island’s one cash machine still
has any money in it. More later perhaps; what we were doing when the news came
through, what we speculated might happen, what jokes we made about perhaps
having to give up shopping and eat Panayiota’s goats and Veneta’schickens — later perhaps.

Oh, and even though the electricity is back here, there
seems to be none at the server, wherever it is, so it might be some time before
I can post this.